Natural
History
Kingsnakes and
milksnakes are some of the most beautiful snakes in the world and are
very popular and easily kept in captivity. Moderately sized and
usually quite docile, these snakes appeal to the beginner as well as
to the experienced herpetoculturist. The scientific name for the
genus of kingsnakes and milksnakes is Lampropeltis.
Lampro
is derived from the Greek word for "shiny" and peltis,
Greek for "shields." The name is a very accurate
descriptor of these snakes with their glossy, smooth, well-defined
scales. Lampropeltis
getula
(kingsnakes), L.
triangulum
(milksnakes) and the other six species (comprising forty-five
subspecies) can be found throughout most of the United States, the
southern parts of Ontario and Quebec, down through Central America
and parts of South America. kings can be found in arid deserts,
swamplands, farmlands, grasslands, pine and deciduous forests, up to
8500 feet in the Rockies and to 10,000 in the Andes, and in riparian
habitats. These constrictors, in the wild they consume a variety of
prey, including other snakes, amphibians, lizards, rodents, birds,
even rattlesnakes.
One of the most
interesting thing about some of the kings and milks, and something
which unfortunately works only too well, is their mimicry of the
venomous coral snakes. As most people cannot tell the difference and
many believe that all snakes are uniformly dangerous, wild kings and
milks are often met with the business end of a shovel rather than the
respect they deserve for their efforts in keeping the rodent
populations in check. To set the record straight, Lampropeltis
and coral snakes can easily be told apart by the order of the color
of their bands. Both snakes have yellow, red and black bands. Kings
and milks have black bands touching the red bands; in corals, the
yellow touches the red bands. A simple rhyme makes it easy to
remember the order: Red on yellow, kill a fellow. An alternative
rhyme, yellow on red, you're dead" is a bit of an overstatement,
as the vast majority of people who do get bitten by a coral snake
just become very ill, recovering with no residual effects.
As Lampropeltis
are easily bred in captivity, there is never a reason to purchase a
wild one. In California and now, in Arizona, there are stringent laws
concerning the wild collection and the sale of captive bred
kingsnakes about which many pet stores are unfamiliar. Captive
breeding has produced numerous color and pattern morphs, ranging from
different types of albinos to striped and mottled markings. Some of
the most striking, however, are the most natural - vivid bands of
colors, or the simple black and brilliant yellows of the Florida and
Sonoran kings.
Kings and milks
are oviparous, laying fifteen or so eggs. Hatchlings emerge from the
eggs anywhere from six to ten weeks after being laid, and range in
size from eight to thirteen inches long. Adults range in size from
three feet up to seven feet, depending upon the species. With proper
care, kings will live 20 or more years.
Selecting
Your Kingsnake or Milksnake
What subspecies
you select is a personal decision, but the criteria by which you
evaluate the potential purchase remains the same. The snake should
have a firm rounded body. Check the sides for any caving, sign of
possible broken ribs (which happens primarily to wild-caught snakes).
The eyes should be clear with no sign of secretions, cloudiness
(other than routine opaquing before shedding) nor any signs of mites;
mites may also be detected by their feces, a grayish-white
"dust" speckling the snake's body. There should be no
gaping--open mouth breathing or catching of breath--which is
indicative of a respiratory or parasitical infection. The skin should
be shiny with no sign of sores, scabs or discolored patches. The
ventral surface (the belly side) should look as good as the top
surface. The vent (cloaca) should be clean, free or any feces or
urates. There should be no swelling either above the vent or towards
the tail. The inside of the mouth should be uniformly pink. Any red
spots may be a sign of beginning mouthrot; any yellow, cheesy
substance is a sign of advanced mouthrot. There should be no excess
mucous, and the tongue sheath should be clean and whole.
Unless a snake
has been handled a lot by a number of different people, it will not
be particularly tame when you first pick it up or when it is first
handed to you. The snake should move purposefully and persistently;
let it move from hand to hand. A wild or highly stressed snake is
going to wave the upper half of its body in the air trying to escape
as soon as it is free of your hands. When the snake is comfortable
with you, it will spend some time wrapped around your hand or arm,
actively interested in its surroundings as evidenced by tongue
flicking and alert to movement. When you first hold the snake, feel
along its entire length to see if you can feel any bumps, lumps or
unusually hard or soft areas. When you put the snake down, check your
hands to see if there are any mites. Look at the snake move to see
that it is moving smoothly, with no abrupt hitches in gait or tremors.
Housing
your snake
Kings and milks
are escape artists. If there is any small (very small) gap or hole,
or any "give" to the fitting of the top attached to their
tank or between the doors and casement, your snake will escape.
Kings, more than any other snake, is known for its tenacity it
testing it's environment, looking for a way out. Once out, they are
very difficult to find. For this reason, the selection and purchase
of a commercial enclosure (or design of a custom enclosure) is just
as important as your personal selection of a snake. A tight enclosure
is more expensive, whether you buy one or make it yourself, but this
is an expense that you cannot skimp on. What is the point of saving
some money on an inferior enclosure if, in the end, you lose your
snake? Doing it right the first time will save you from some grief
down the line.
Enclosure
The enclosure you
select must have a tightly fitting, locking, top. Available
commercially are a variety of glass enclosures with tops consisting
of screen mesh and a hinged glass door which locks into place with a
small swing latch. Available now are also locking screen tops which
can be put on previously purchased tanks. With either of these
enclosures, check the give of the tops before you place your snake
inside and walk away. Snakes are, for the lack of a better word,
squishy, and can squeeze themselves through impossibly tight spaces.
Any gaps due to "give" in the doors or tops can be reduced
significantly by fitting aquarium airline tubing all around the opening.
Hatchlings may be
housed in a ten gallon enclosures. Medium sized adults may be housed
in twenty gallon enclosures. The longer and larger snakes should be
housed in a 60 gallon enclosure. Try to get high-sided enclosures so
that you may put in some vertical climbing and above-the-floor
basking areas. Milk and king snakes, like all the other snakes in the
family Colubridae (typically, non-venomous snakes considered to be
more highly evolved than the boas and pythons), have only one
functioning lung. Due to the lack of space inside the confines of
their rib cage, all organs are elongated and so there is now room for
only one working lung. Their left lung is still there, withered to a
vestigial stub. Because of this somewhat reduced lung capacity, and
the fact that when such snakes cannot stretch fully out on a regular
basis, they are prone to respiratory infections. For this reason, it
is important to give the snake as much stretching room as possible.
Heat
The Lampropeltis
that live in climates that experience extremes in heat and cold alter
their daily habits to accommodate such extremes. Hibernating through
the cold winters, northern and mountain snakes spend the season
dormant. Desert species will hide in cool crevices during the hottest
part of the day, becoming crepuscular (active at dawn and dusk). In
captivity, the extremes do not need to be provided unless you are
trying to breed your snakes. In general, provide a temperature
gradient ranging from 76-86 F, with nighttime drops into the low
70's. If you are providing an enclosure with high enough sides to
establish basking and hiding areas at different levels within the
enclosure, you will need to make sure that gradient is both
horizontal as well as vertical. Do not try to guess the temperature.
You must use thermometers. Ideally, one should be placed in the cool
end, the warm end, and at any other area where the snake spends much
of its time. The hottest areas should not exceed the maximum stated
range by more than a couple of degrees, especially for snakes from
temperate areas.
Heating pads
(either people heating pads or ones developed for reptiles) can be
placed under half the tank, or inside the tank, under half the
substrate. Under no circumstances is a hot rock
to be used as is or as the sole source of heat. If you want to use
one, it must be connected to a thermostat so that you can control the
temperature; these "rocks" heat up to 105 F on the surface,
too hot for the majority of reptiles, and capable of causing severe
burns. Incandescent and other heat lights are impractical for two
reasons: they must be turned off a night, thus allowing to great a
drop in temperature, and they bother the snakes, especially the
nocturnal ones. Radiant heat from below can be supplemented with a non-light
emitting heat source such as the new ceramic heating elements. If
the ambient room air temperature is always warm (in the low to mid
part of the gradient required), then you may be able to make do with
only one heat source.
Humidity and Water
Provide a bowl of
water for your snake. This is generally all the humidity they will
need. They will often soak in the water, especially prior to a shed.
As they often defecate in the water, you much check it daily,
cleaning and disinfecting it before placing it back in the tank. One
of the problems experienced years ago by herpetoculturists and
hobbyists keeping Lampropeltis is that the substrate was kept
too damp, causing bacterial, fungal and respiratory infections. Make
sure that the substrate remains dry at all times.
Note: some books
and herp keepers recommend just putting in a bowl of water once a
week for a limited period of time. Until such time as you learn to
speak Lampropeltis, or your snake learns to vocalize its needs, or
you both communicate by telepathy, so that you will know when exactly
it is thirsty, keep water in there all the time.
Furnishings
Kings and milks
are rather secretive snakes, preferring to curl up in a rocky crevice
or under a log. Shelters of some sort should be provided in both the
cool and in the warm ends of the enclosure. They can range from
commercially available "rocky" caves, half-circles of tree
bark, and upside-down flower pots. Less aesthetically pleasing is the
"green" approach--recycle facial tissue and other suitably
sized boxes into caves. They are easily disposed of and replaced when
they get soiled.
Enclosures may
range from the strictly utilitarian (substrate, caves, water bowl) to
being a vivarium, outfitted with substrate similar to that found in
the snake's native habitat, rocks, branches, backdrops, etc. It is
easier to start of utilitarian, and then design and plan the interior
design once you see your snake in place and it has acclimated to captivity.
Substrate
Until you are
certain that your new acquisition has no worms, protozoan infections
or mites, start it off on paper towels or butcher paper. Easily
changed when soiled, these materials will also enable you to monitor
the condition of the feces and to detect the presence of mites.
Once you are sure
your snake is parasite-free and healthy, you can continue using these
papers, or use one of the following substrates: untinted aspen
shavings (cedar and redwood are toxic, and there is some feeling that
their relative, the pine, may be toxic as well); Astroturf or outdoor
carpeting; number three aquarium gravel (not silica sand), washed and
dried before use; mixture of sterile potting soil and sand. This
latter substrate is what caused early king-keepers such problems--the
surface of this type of substrate was too often damp. When using this
soil mix, the top several inches should be very dry. Desert vivaria
can be outfitted with a fine grade aquarium silica sand.
The real key to
substrates is how difficult they are to clean and change, and how
likely you are to do what is necessary as often as it is necessary.
The more difficult or complicated you make the inside of the
enclosure to clean, the less likely a busy person is going to do it.
Find that delicate balance between providing as much interest and
variety for your snake and what you can reasonably expect to be able
to do on an at least weekly basis.
Feeding
Captive born
hatchlings are started off on pink mice, and so feeding them is
rarely a problem. Wild caught snakes, on the other hand, may have
been feeding primarily on lizards or frogs, making it quite a bit
more difficult and time consuming to get them switched over to mice. . All kings and milks should be fed
prekilled prey.
Hatchlings can be
started on one-two day old pinkie mice. If frozen mice are used, make
sure to defrost thoroughly (leave on counter, under a light, or
soaking in warm water). Feed one to two mice every two to seven days,
depending upon growth rate desired. Generally speaking, a snake will
grow faster being fed several small prey a couple of times a week
rather than one big prey once a week. The smaller prey are more
digestible than the larger prey, so the snake is getting more
nutrition from them.
Subadults can be
offered bigger mice one or more times a week. A good rule of thumb is
to feed prey that is as big girth-wise as is the widest part of the
snake's body. You will find that they are hungrier in the spring and
summer, winding down during the fall; many stop feeding altogether
during the winter months even though the may still be somewhat active.
Adult size is
generally reached within three years at which time the amount and
rate of feeding can be reduced. Feed adult mice or just weaned pink
rats. At this point, judgment must come into play. You want your
snake to be well rounded, with no visible line of backbone or ribs.
The amount of food it takes to maintain that weight and appearance
varies between species. Start with once a week; if the snake looks
too lean, increase to one mouse twice a week. Another rule of thumb:
snakes over four feet long need at least two adult mice each week.
Veterinary
Care
This is an
essential, and often overlooked, part of bringing a new animal into
your home, and when an animal gets sick and changes to its
environment fails to achieve a cure. When your snake first defecates,
collect the feces in a clean plastic bag, seal it, label it with the
date, your name and phone number and the snake's name, and take it
and your snake to a vet who is experienced with reptiles and have the
sample tested for worms.
Handling
Your Snake
After giving your
snake a couple of days to settle in, begin picking it up and handling
it gently. It may move from you and it may anoint you with a smelly
musky substance from it's vent. Be gentle but persistent. Daily
contact will begin to establish a level of trust and confidence
between you and your snake. When it is comfortable with you, you can
begin taking it around the house. Don't get over-confident! Given a
chance and close proximity to seat cushions, your snake will make a
run (well, a slither) for it, easing down between the cushions and
from there, to points possibly unknown. Always be gentle, and try to
avoid sudden movements. If the snake wraps around your arm or neck,
you can unwind it by gently grasping it by the tail and unwrapping it
from around you. If you start at the head, you will find that your
snake is stronger than you are, or at least, more tenacious.
Necessities
Some things you
should have on hand for general maintenance and first aid include:
Nolvasan (chlorhexidine diacetate) for cleaning enclosures and
disinfecting food and water bowls, litter boxes, tubs and sinks etc.
Betadine (povidone/iodine) for cleansing scratches and wounds. Set
aside a food storage bowl, feeding and water bowls, soaking bowl or
tub, even sponges, to be used only for your snake.
Sources